Changing Speeds

Bounceback, Breakthrough, or Balderdash?

Last year around this time, I wrote a series of articles about the “All-Bounceback Team,” highlighting aging players who were off to such great starts that they had already provided more value than they had during the whole previous season, and predicting whether they could continue on at that level. In trying to put together a similar list this week, I noticed there are far more young veterans surpassing their recent performances than there were older veterans reclaiming their mojo. Thus, I’ve decided to use this year’s columns to identify whether these players’ performance so far points to a “Bounceback” for a veteran player, a “Breakthrough” for a young player who has never experienced much success, or is merely the “Balderdash” of small-sample success that’s doomed to erode.

The players below have all earned at least 5.0 VORP so far this year, and have already exceeded last year’s VORP total (posted in a minimum of 250 plate appearances). I’ve listed each player’s 2010 and 2011 numbers (through Sunday), their PECOTA forecast, and an excerpt from their player comment in Baseball Prospectus 2011 to see whether their success this season was foreseen.

There were 20 position players that fit these criteria this year. I’ll cover the 10 who have most exceeded last year’s production below, and the other 10 in a future installment—yes, that one will include Lance Berkman, this season’s living embodiment of the bounce-back year.

Justin Smoak, 1BAge: 24BP 2011: “Some of his struggles can be explained by a lowly .255 BABIP posted despite a superior line-drive rate, but perhaps he stood to benefit from some additional time to consolidate his minor-league learning. At 24, Smoak remains the offensive foundation of the Mariners’ future.”

One of the most frequent questions we’re asked after the release of each BP annual is why the player comments don’t always agree with the PECOTA projections. The answer, of course, is that the exceptionally witty and attractive people who write the comments use tools like PECOTA to inform their opinions, not to create them. PECOTA may have given Smoak’s power potential the same look given to teenagers who promise to take the garbage out when they’re done playing Black Ops, but our man on the Mariners beat rightly pegged Smoak’s 2010 struggles as those of a very good hitter learning to face the best pitchers in the world. Of course, .343 TAv is too much to ask, but Smoak should hit 25 home runs and maintain a solid OBP.The Verdict: Breakthrough

Alex Gordon, LFAge: 27BP 2011: “He was once the subject of George Brett dreams, but the older Gordon gets, and the more productive his bat should be, the worse his seasons turn out.”

As Craig Brownpointed out last month, Gordon started the season armed with an uncharacteristically hacktastic approach that bore short-term fruit. Since then, with the predictability of summer leading to autumn or a trip to Denny’s leading to regret,

Gordon’s .356/.412/.567 April has given way to a .179/.240/.289 May, and he has hit only three home runs all year. While Gordon is sure to be better this year than last, he’ll never have enough bat to be an asset in an outfield corner.The Verdict: Balderdash

Adam Lind, DHAge: 27BP 2011: “Lind's plate discipline, already marginal, evaporated entirely, his power declined sharply, and at times he looked lost at the plate. … His favorable second-half split and the ability of even dead cats to bounce temper the pessimism to a degree.”

Lind was a Supertrain-level flop last year as his season-long inability to make contact led to a huge jump in his strikeout rate, something his pedestrian walk rate couldn’t make up for. So far this year, his contact and strikeout rates are back to their 2009 levels, and he’s hitting home runs again. However, he’s walking less than ever, and probably won’t be able to maintain an above-average on-base percentage throughout the season. A significant drop in his batting average would still leave him at his PECOTA forecast, which itself would be a bounceback from his disastrous 2010. If you put a gun to my head, I’d (a) peg him to finish at .280/.330/.480, and (b) ask you why you’re threatening violence just to find out what I think of Adam Lind.The Verdict: Bounceback

Jeff Francoeur, OFAge: 27BP 2011: “The book on Francoeur is Bible-length; with 845 games played before his 27th birthday, the once-promising prospect’s vulnerability against right-handed pitching is as well-documented as it is exploitable. …H e inked a one-year deal with the Royals in December, touching off a firestorm of snark that has yet to subside.”

The book on Francoeur this season may not yet be Bible-length, but it’s definitely Revelations-inscrutable. Frenchy is seeing more pitches and swinging at far fewer of them than usual, yet he’s still harder to walk than a pet rhinoceros. This newfound patience seems to instead be manifesting itself in a higher batting average and more power, as Francoeur waits for and then attacks his pitch. Is it sustainable? Color me skeptical. More than 17 percent of fly balls he hits are leaving the park this year, compared to 10 percent over his career. Once those fly balls start finding mitts his OBP will become a liability, making him a stronger “sell” stock than $11 Pets.com.The Verdict: Balderdash

Casey Kotchman, 1BAge: 28BP 2011: “Among players who have accrued at least as many plate appearances as a first baseman in a single season as the Mariners' new acquisition did while manning the game’s premier offensive position, the lefty’s lowly TAv ranked third-worst since 1954, behind only the disco-era stylings of Dan Meyer and Dave Stapleton’s disastrous 1983. A low BABIP wasn’t kind to Kotchman, but he finished more than a few lucky bounces away from respectability, and his combination of extreme ground ball-hitting and slow-motion speed has never resulted in much success on balls in play.”

Next up in our parade of disappointing top prospects we have Casey Kotchman, still taking his walks and keeping the ball down. Only about 18 percent of balls he puts in play are classified as fly balls—a ridiculously low number—which has helped him achieve a .356 BABIP, compared to .271 for his career. That’s almost certain to fall, and when it does Kotchman’s solid glove, lack of power, and ability to avoid outs makes him at best a Mientkiewicz-class player. Does that classify as a breakthrough? Compared to his career so far, sure; compared to the offensive expectations of an American League first baseman, no.The Verdict: Balderdash

Matt Treanor, CAge: 35BP 2011: “While extremely limited on offense and likely devoid of value going forward—especially for a playoff contender—Treanor served his purpose in 2010, offering a steady hand behind the plate.”

What can we make of Matt Treanor’s newfound ability to draw walks? One idea is that he has suddenly learned to be patient at the plate, as he’s swinging at five percent fewer pitches than he did last year. On the other hand, it could be that he has just faced a random group of pitchers that have had trouble finding the strike zone, as evidenced by a five percent drop in the percentage of strikes he’s being thrown. If asked to choose between a sudden change in approach for a 35-year-old catcher and a small-sample statistical fluke, I’ll bet on the latter every time.The Verdict: Balderdash

Avila’s six home runs are only one less than he hit all last year, but his power surge isn’t unprecedented—he launched 17 long ones between Erie and Detroit in 2009. He’s hitting lots of fly balls, so there’s no reason he can’t park somewhere between 15 and 20 in the seats this season. With the offensive bar for catchers set lower than Richard Sterban’s solo on Elvira, Avila’s power will make him an asset even with a subpar OBP.The Verdict: Breakthrough

Melky Cabrera, OFAge: 26BP 2011: “In the end, the Braves were left with a pudgy switch-hitter who can't hit lefties, doesn't walk, doesn't hit for power, and is limited to a corner.”

Unlike Avila, Cabrera has never shown much power before, at least not over a sustained period. As Marc Normandin patiently explained last week, with someone like Melky you have to place a lot more weight on the thousands of punchless plate appearances that preceded his current surge. Look back in a month, and Melky will be Melky again, slugging below .400 and struggling to keep his TAv above .250.The Verdict: Balderdash

Michael Brantley, OFAge: 24BP 2011: “His minor-league abilities revolved around slashing line drives, drawing some walks, and running, but all he's really done in the majors is hit a little bit, as the walk rate has been down from his minor-league days and he'll never have power.”

Cleveland fans have seemingly waited for this kind of production from Brantley longer than Beach Boys fans had to wait for SMiLE, and it looks like they may wind up equally satisfied with the final product. Brantley has hit a few homers, but that’s really just window dressing as he’s not likely to develop double-digit home-run power. The real news is that his walk rate has climbed above 10 percent while hitting more ground balls and posting a higher batting average, which means all the ingredients are there for Brantley to become the solid table-setter everyone expected him to be.The Verdict: Breakthrough

Cameron Maybin, OFAge: 24BP 2011: “The huge difference between Maybin's major- and minor-league strikeout rates isn't a product of mean umps hating on a kid—Maybin swings and misses a third again as often as your average major leaguer. You can hope that's correctable, but Petco doesn't seem a likely spot.”

Maybin isn’t exactly a free-swinger; it’s just that he doesn’t make a lot of contact when he does swing. There’s so much swing-and-miss in his game that striking out in 26.5 percent of his at-bats, like he has done this year, can be considered major progress. Combine that with a bump in his walk rate and a little more power, and perhaps we’re about to see Maybin finally turn his tools into production—not the star-level production we were once promised, but enough production to have a career.The Verdict: Breakthrough

These evaluations are valid if the conditions under which the player is performing has not changed. The story on Kotchman is that he has overcome some vision problems. http://www.tampabay.com/sports/baseball/rays/article1168725.ece

Yea, well until he has 500 PA, Rays fans should be highly skeptical. And even then we should be skeptical given Jason Bartlett's 2009 season. Or does BP consider a fluke season equivalent to a breakout season?

You may be underselling Lind. He looks like he did in 2009 - much more selective, and when he chooses to swing now, he is driving the ball much more. Of course, that all presumes that he returns from his back injury with no lasting effect.